NASA Goddard team to participate in dark energy mission

Feb 12, 2013

The Euclid spacecraft, shown in this artist's impression, is scheduled to launch in 2020. Credit: ESA/C. Carreau

The European Space Agency (ESA) has selected three NASA-nominated science teams to participate in their planned Euclid mission, including one led by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.

NASA is a partner in the Euclid mission, a space telescope designed to probe the mysteries of dark energy and dark matter. Euclid is currently scheduled to launch in 2020.

The Goddard team is led by Alexander Kashlinsky, an astrophysicist with Science Systems and Applications, Inc., in Lanham, Md. The group plans to use Euclid imaging data to explore the cosmic infrared background (CIB), the collective light emitted throughout cosmic history by all sources, including those that cannot be detected directly.

According to theoretical models, the early universe was dark and featureless until the first stars formed. When these stars died, they exploded as supernovae or collapsed into black holes, initiating changes that culminated in the diverse and complex cosmos we observe around us today. Each modification left its imprint in the CIB.

The project, named LIBRAE (Looking at Infrared Background Radiation Anisotropies with Euclid), will provide insight into stellar and galactic populations in the early universe that are unobtainable by other means.

"With LIBRAE, we hope to probe the distribution of early CIB source populations with high precision at scales as small as one arcminute to tens of degrees," Kashlinsky explained. "In addition, we will identify the cosmic times where these populations existed and determine what portion of the CIB was generated by stars and what fraction was produced by black holes."

Scientists from the LIBRAE team acquired an early glimpse of the cosmic infrared background (CIB) using NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope as a proof of concept. These panels, about 1 degree across, show the same region in the constellation Boötes. Top: Spitzer's initial infrared view, including foreground stars and fainter galaxies, seen at a wavelength of 4.5 microns. Bottom: Masking out all of the resolved stars and galaxies (grey) reveals the CIB, which is smoothed and enhanced in this view. The known remaining galaxy populations cannot account for the large-scale structure seen in the CIB. LIBRAE will identify the nature and epochs of the new populations responsible for this structure. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/GSFC

Kashlinsky will be joined by Harvey Moseley of Goddard and Richard Arendt of the University of Maryland Baltimore County. All three work in the Laboratory for Observational Cosmology at Goddard.

Other members include Volker Bromm at the University of Texas in Austin, Matthew Ashby at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass., and Günther Hasinger at the Institute for Astronomy in Honolulu. Three European collaborators currently round out the international LIBRAE team.

"Euclid's visible and infrared all-sky survey is perfectly suited to the LIBRAE studies of the early universe. We are very pleased to be joining the excellent team that has developed this mission," Moseley said.

The other two U.S. science teams are led by Ranga-Ram Chary of the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, Calif., and Jason Rhodes of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, also in Pasadena.

Euclid will observe up to two billion galaxies occupying more than one-third of the sky with the goal of better understanding the contents of our universe.

The matter we interact with every day—tables, chairs, people, Earth—makes up less than five percent of our cosmos. According to current understanding, a mysterious substance called dark matter constitutes 24 percent of the matter in the universe. Dark matter is invisible, neither emitting nor absorbing light, but it exerts a gravitational pull.

Something even more enigmatic, dark energy, makes up about 73 percent of the universe. While dark matter attracts through gravity, dark energy is thought to exert a repulsive force that pushes matter apart. Scientists think dark energy may be responsible for expanding our universe at ever-increasing speeds, an observation that earned the 2011 Nobel Prize in physics.

The primary goal of Euclid's mission is to understand the nature of dark energy and dark matter by accurately measuring the accelerated expansion of the universe through several independent methods.

Euclid is a European Space Agency mission with science instruments and data analysis provided by the Euclid Consortium with important participation from NASA. NASA's Euclid Project Office is based at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. JPL will contribute the infrared flight detectors for one of Euclid's two science instruments. NASA Goddard will assist with infrared detector characterization and will perform detailed testing on flight detectors prior to delivery. Three U.S. science teams, led by JPL, Goddard and the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center at Caltech, will contribute to science planning and data analysis. Caltech manages JPL for NASA.

The first-ever mission dedicated to looking for dark matter and dark energy, two mysterious entities believed to explain the composition of the universe as we know it, will be launched in 2020, the European ...

Euclid, an exciting new mission to map the geometry, distribution and evolution of dark energy and dark matter has just been formally adopted by ESA as part of their Cosmic Vision 2015-2025 progamme. Name ...

So-called dark energy, believed to play a role in the accelerated expansion of the Universe, will be studied in a major science mission to be launched later this decade, the European Space Agency (ESA) said ...

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